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The Ace of Clubs: Part 3 of the Red Dog Conspiracy

by Patricia Loofbourrow

The one secret which could destroy everything ...

After financial disaster and the zeppelin bombing, the city of Bridges is reeling. Three of the four Families are implicated, and an inquest is called to investigate.

After her failure to prove Jack Diamond's guilt in David Bryce's kidnapping and the deaths of her friends, private eye and mobster's moll Jacqueline Spadros has had enough. While she and her former lover Joseph Kerr try to learn who killed their family friend, they also begin making plans to leave the city.

But the secrets Jacqui has kept over the years are coming back to cause her serious trouble. Will she be able to escape Bridges? Or will she be forced to face the terrible consequences of her lies and trickery once and for all?

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Editors:
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Genres:
Tags:
Tropes: Abandoned Place, Antihero, Conspiracy, Dystopian Governments, Fish Out of Water, Mad Scientist, Reluctant Hero, Secret Society
Word Count: 75000
Setting: Far future North America
Languages Available: English
Series Type: Continuous / Same Characters
Tropes: Abandoned Place, Antihero, Conspiracy, Dystopian Governments, Fish Out of Water, Mad Scientist, Reluctant Hero, Secret Society
Word Count: 75000
Setting: Far future North America
Languages Available: English
Series Type: Continuous / Same Characters
Reviews:Margaret McGaffey Fisk on Tales to Tide You Over wrote:

The Ace of Clubs is the third book in the Red Dog Conspiracy and a very complicated novel for oh so many reasons. If you haven’t read the series, be aware there will be spoilers not for this book but for the ones previous to some degree so choose whether to read on with that awareness.

When I first finished the book, I thought I didn’t like it, but while I’d like to have seen Jacqui take a more active role at times, it took a bit to realize my issue wasn’t with the book at all. The series is a futuristic steampunk, noir, crime family epic with all the Dickens elements I adore of privilege, underclasses, and society running at multiple levels often oblivious of each other to some extent. The characters are nuanced and complicated. They don’t always make the right choices (or sometimes ever) and seem a little too willing to sacrifice others in the name of themselves, but what’s key is they are true to their own character, consistent in their inconsistencies, and often enough infuriating in their decisions.

The Ace of Clubs is very true to these parts, especially Jacqui’s lack of control over her life and the consequences her hidden rebellion enact on the lives of those around her. Sure, the main story focuses on the inquest into the destruction of the zeppelin, but it’s what the inquest brings into the open that forms the heart of the novel. This is a story of betrayals, both those known and unknown. It raises questions of duty when the target of that duty is innocent and not the one who forced Jacqui into the situation, but he is the one harmed should she reject her unwilling duty.

Jacqui seems to realize how her choices harm those around her at times but then doesn’t change her behavior always, so there’s the hint at growth to come, but she’s not there yet. Still, some of her actions now incorporate this understanding, like when she tells Tony the truth about her investigations so no one else will suffer for her. She’s not a perfect person, nor would I want her to be, but I do appreciate the times when she looks beyond her own selfish needs. Her work with the inventor is in the same line. Yes, it would help her as well, but it helps all of them.

Again, I selfishly wanted more of the story focused on the inventors, but that series thread does advance as well, equally as seeped in the clash of the different crime families. There is a lot of manipulation and double-speak throughout, clouding motivations and goals under a mist filled with violence. The history revealed in The Alcatraz Coup also has significance.

Jacqui’s motivations cut to the core of why my first reaction was angst, again a symptom of strong characters that have engaged me to the extent of frustration because I don’t support what they are doing at this point. Basically, Jacqui’s main actions, as you might have suspected from The Queen of Diamonds, involve her childhood love Joe. Whether it’s because I see Tony as an innocent (in a manner of speaking), or because I’m right, I don’t trust Joe. I find him disruptive, and his timing is all too suspicious. The risks he encourages Jacqui to take knowing the nature of her father-in-law’s interest are not those driven by a definition of love I appreciate. That said, neither Joe nor Jacqui act in an unbelievable way, just not how I would wish them to. It’s odd for someone so mixed up in conniving as Jacqui is to be so trusting, but she does trust Joe, and on too slim a history to my mind. It makes her less honest, even with herself, and harsher than the intrepid investigator we first met in Jacq of Spades, but that doesn’t mean the development is unwarranted.

Ultimately, Ace of Clubs is true to the series. It focuses on some of my least favorite parts so far, but considering the amount of thought and attention the story drew from me, it’s the characters I’m frustrated with rather than the story. I’m still looking forward to seeing how the pieces come together. What happens with Joe may be a deciding factor in my following through the whole series (an odd comment once you’ve read the book, but I have my reasons), but for the time being, I’m still sucked in and would feel the pain of threads left untied should I stop now.


Third in a 13-part series. It is highly advised to read the series in order.

About the Author

Patricia Loofbourrow, MD is a NY Times and USA Today best-selling SFF and non-fiction writer, PC gamer, ornamental food gardener, fiber artist, and wildcrafter who loves power tools, dancing, genetics and anything to do with outer space. She was born in southern California and has lived in Chicago and Tokyo. She currently lives in Oklahoma with her husband and three grown children.